Dr. Timothy M. Rector dds West Jefferson

Doctor: Dr. Timothy M. Rector

Dr. Timothy M. Rector - Worst Dentist, My Opinion

Hospital Complaint About: Dr. Timothy M. Rector Dds West Jefferson - Dr. Timothy M. Rector

North Carolina, Jefferson
Author: Undisclosed
Hospital Service: Billing Errors - Nurse: Dr. Timoth

Occur date: Jan 02 2012
Post date: Jan 03 2012, 06:02:37 AM

Doctor Complaint: Dr. Timothy M. Rector - Dr. Timothy M. Rector Dds West Jefferson

Please Note: This post is an opinion based on one person's experience dealing with Timothy M. Rector DDS in West Jefferson North Carolina. The person's opinion may be different than others. It may be better than others but on the other hand, it may be worse. Again, this is my opinion.

Saw Dr. Timothy M. Rector DDS in west jefferson north carolina. (First mistake!) Despite having been told by 2 other dentist that I needed a tooth extracted. Mr. Rector made me believe that if he filled it, It would be fine. Not true. After he filled it, I started having a lot of pain. It feels like an electric shock going from my tooth down to my jaw bone.

I had a 1000.00 cap on my insurance and since I was assured that the cost would be covered under my insurance, I thought, Why not?

Well.. Long story short. Not only was the tooth not covered by insurance - but now, I have been threatened in small claims court into paying for work that has to be redone.

I would have dropped it but then the Dr. Timothy Rectors billing department started their crap.

The billing department started sending bills continuously and calling at times which was inconvenient. I then received a copy of all my dental records as if they were using my dental history to threaten me!

Not just my dental history but other family members history as well.

(Even though i am the ONLY PERSON in my family who hasn't paid for services.)

Not cool. Timothy M. Rector should reported to the American Dental Association and to the local dental review board. Terrible business. I thought that a patient must sign consent forms to have any dental record released. HIPPA calls it an acknowledgement form - Mr. Rector obviously thinks that it is alright to send out detailed dental records without signed consent forms. I don't think so. However, I will leave it up to the appropriate agencies to decide.

( http://www.ncdentalboard.org/PDF/COMPLAINT%20FORM%20-%20PATIENT.pdf )

Below is their office address.

Summey, Brett T DDS - Rector & Summey
1 W State St, West Jefferson, NC 28694
336.246.4151
TRectorDDS@skybest.com

NC Dental Board, Peer Review, NC District Court, U.S. District Court, Federal Trade Commission, Post Youtube Videos, consumer....



I will post a follow up to let you know what ends up happening.








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Dr. Timothy M. Rector dds West Jefferson - HOSPITAL INFORMATION:
Address: - North Carolina, Jefferson Phone:






1 Comments       Leave comment to complaint below

John
A Person
Jan 08 2012, 01:19:37 PM
Well, if Timothy Rector provided you with other family members dental records without their explicit consent, then you can probably file a law suit against Timothy Rector. Ultimately the dentist is in charge of their dental records. A similar case is going forward in California. I'll post the link and everything below.

http://www.drbicuspid.com:80/index.aspx?sec=sup_n&sub=pmt&pag=dis&ItemID=309372

U.S. Supreme Court allows dental records lawsuit
By Donna Domino, Features Editor

December 15, 2011 -- The U.S. Supreme Court said it will not review a California Supreme Court decision that allowed a Los Angeles dental patient to sue a debt collector who gave his dental records to credit reporting agencies following a bill dispute with a dentist.

U.S. Supreme Court allows dental records lawsuit
By Donna Domino, Features Editor

December 15, 2011 -- The U.S. Supreme Court said it will not review a California Supreme Court decision that allowed a Los Angeles dental patient to sue a debt collector who gave his dental records to credit reporting agencies following a bill dispute with a dentist.

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The December 12 high court action leaves standing a June decision in which the California court reinstated claims brought against Stewart Mortensen, alleging he violated California's Confidentiality of Medical Information Act, according to a story by Health IT Law & Industry Report.

The case stems from a dispute that began in 2000 between Robert Brown, a Los Angeles lawyer, and Rolf Reinholds, DDS, a Glendale, CA, dentist who treated Brown and his two children. Brown claimed that Dr. Reinholds billed him $600 for a dental crown that he never received, and he refused to pay for.

Dr. Reinholds subsequently turned the matter over to a bill collector and a credit agency, along with a copy of Brown's dental charts and the charts of his two minor children.

Debt collector Stewart Mortensen in turn disclosed the Browns' confidential medical information to the consumer reporting agencies Experian, Equifax, and Trans Union. He also sent the family's Social Security numbers, personal information, and complete dental histories to the agencies.

After Mortensen refused to stop the disclosures, Brown sued Mortensen, alleging violations of the California's confidentiality law, which forbids the unauthorized dissemination of medical information.

A Los Angeles trial court said Brown's claims were too vague and dismissed them. The Court of Appeal concurred, ruling that Brown's claims were pre-empted by the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).

But in June the California Supreme Court overturned both lower court rulings, finding that the FCRA is designed to protect against harmful disclosure of inaccurate information, while California law forbids unauthorized release of medical information.

Dr. Reinholds also made further unauthorized disclosures to Equifax, and Brown never authorized Dr. Reinholds or Mortensen to disclose this information to any third party, including the three consumer reporting agencies, the high court ruled.

Brown's original lawsuit against Mortensen will now go back to the trial court.

Related Reading
Scottish woman upset by dentist's use of medical records, December 8, 2011

Dental patient can sue over disclosed records, June 21, 2011

U.S. HHS proposes privacy rule on medical records, June 1, 2011


Copyright © 2011 DrBicuspid.com

Last Updated 12/15/2011 11:57:12 AM

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You should file complaints with the local dental board and FTC.










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